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				Title:     Occident And Orient 
			    
Author: Charles Kingsley [
More Titles by Kingsley]		                
			    
How will it dawn, the coming Christmas-day?
 A northern Christmas, such as painters love,
 And kinsfolk shaking hands but once a year,
 And dames who tell old legends by the fire?
 Red sun, blue sky, white snow, and pearled ice,
 Keen ringing air, which sets the blood on fire,
 And makes the old man merry with the young
 Through the short sunshine, through the longer night?
 Or southern Christmas, dark and dank with mist,
 And heavy with the scent of steaming leaves,
 And rose-buds mouldering on the dripping porch;
 On twilight, without rise or set of sun,
 Till beetles drone along the hollow lane
 And round the leafless hawthorns, flitting bats
 Hawk the pale moths of winter? Welcome then,
 At best, the flying gleam, the flying shower,
 The rain-pools glittering on the long white roads,
 And shadows sweeping on from down to down
 Before the salt Atlantic gale! Yet come
 In whatsoever garb, or gay or sad,
 Come fair, come foul, 'twill still be Christmas-day.
 How will it dawn, the coming Christmas-day?
 To sailors lounging on the lonely deck
 Beneath the rushing trade-wind? or, to him
 Who by some noisome harbor of the east
 Watches swart arms roll down the precious bales,
 Spoils of the tropic forests; year by year
 Amid the din of heathen voices, groaning,
 Himself half heathen? How to those--brave hearts!
 Who toil with laden loins and sinking stride
 Beside the bitter wells of treeless sands
 Toward the peaks which flood the ancient Nile,
 To free a tyrant's captives? How to those--
 New patriarchs of the new-found under world--
 Who stand like Jacob, on the virgin lawns,
 And count their flocks' increase? To them that day
 Shall dawn in glory, and solstitial blaze
 Of full midsummer sun: to them that morn
 Gay flowers beneath their feet, gay birds aloft
 Shall tell of naught but summer; but to them,
 Ere yet, unwarned by carol or by chime,
 They spring into the saddle, thrills may come
 From that great heart of Christendom which beats
 Round all the worlds; and gracious thoughts of youth;
 Of steadfast folk, who worship God at home,
 Of wise words, learnt beside their mother's knee;
 Of innocent faces, upturned once again
 In awe and joy to listen to the tale
 Of God made man, and in a manger laid:
 May soften, purify, and raise the soul
 From selfish cares, and growing lust of gain
 And phantoms of this dream, which some call life,
 Toward eternal facts; for here or there
 Summer or winter, 'twill be Christmas-day.
 Blest day, which aye reminds us year by year
 What 'tis to be a man: to curb and spurn
 The tyrant in us: that ignobler self
 Which boasts, not loathes, its likeness to the brute,
 And owns no good save ease, no ill save pain,
 No purpose, save its share in that wild war
 In which, through countless ages, living things
 Compete in internecine greed--ah, God!
 Are we as creeping things, which have no Lord?
 That we are brutes, great God, we know too well:
 Apes daintier-featured; silly birds who flaunt
 Their plumes, unheeding of the fowler's step;
 Spiders who catch with paper, not with webs;
 Tigers who slay with cannon and sharp steel,
 Instead of teeth and claws; all these we are.
 Are we no more than these save in degree?
 No more than these; and born but to compete--
 To envy and devour, like beast or herb
 Mere fools of nature; puppets of strong lusts,
 Taking the sword to perish with the sword
 Upon the universal battle-field,
 Even as the things upon the moor outside?
 The heath eats up green grass and delicate flowers,
 The pine eats up the heath, the grub the pine,
 The finch the grub, the hawk the silly finch;
 And man, the mightiest of all beasts of prey,
 Eats what he lists;--the strong eat up the weak;
 The many eat the few; great nations, small;
 And he who cometh in the name of all
 Shall, greediest, triumph by the greed of all;
 And armed by his own victims, eat up all.
 While even out of the eternal heavens
 Looks patient down the great magnanimous God
 Who, Maker of all worlds, did sacrifice
 All to himself. Nay, but himself to one
 Who taught mankind on that first Christmas-day
 What 'twas to be a man: to give not take;
 To serve not rule; to nourish not devour;
 To help, not crush; if need, to die, not live.
 Oh, blessed day which givest the eternal lie
 To self and sense and all the brute within;
 Oh, come to us, amid this war of life,
 To hall and hovel, come, to all who toil
 In senate, shop, or study; and to those
 Who sundered by the wastes of half a world
 Ill warned, and sorely tempted, ever face
 Nature's brute powers and men unmanned to brutes,
 Come to them, blest and blessing, Christmas-day.
 Tell them once more the tale of Bethlehem,
 The kneeling shepherds and the Babe Divine,
 And keep them men indeed, fair Christmas-day.
[The end]
Charles Kingsley's poem: Occident And Orient
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